Help Keeping Queen Alive
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Help Keeping Queen Alive
I just caught a Camponotus pennsylvanicus queen and am really hoping she works out and I start a colony. I have her in the same conditions as the ant I caught last year. I'll explain last years queen.
Last year I found a Camponotus castaneus queen. She lived for months, but never chewed her wings off, never laid eggs, and eventually died. I had her in a dark, quiet, undisturbed location in the typical test tube setup. Since my whole house is very cold (about 68 F or 20 C) I created an insulated area and laid the test tube partially on a heat mat. I monitored the temp very carefully and she had room to move from a warmer side to a colder side, but the temp was never lower than 75 F and never higher than 85 F.
So I'm worried about the same fate befalling this queen. Since it is my second year colonyless I am hoping it all works out. I know most people just keep them in a room that has no air conditioning but I don't have a room like that. If there is a costly setup with heat lamps and stuff that other people have tested, I'm willing to pay for it. I just really want a surviving colony.
Obviously I'm not giving up on the search for other queens because I know tragedy can strike and nothing can be done. Some queens just don't make it. But I really want to make sure my setup is not the reason if anything goes wrong.
Last year I found a Camponotus castaneus queen. She lived for months, but never chewed her wings off, never laid eggs, and eventually died. I had her in a dark, quiet, undisturbed location in the typical test tube setup. Since my whole house is very cold (about 68 F or 20 C) I created an insulated area and laid the test tube partially on a heat mat. I monitored the temp very carefully and she had room to move from a warmer side to a colder side, but the temp was never lower than 75 F and never higher than 85 F.
So I'm worried about the same fate befalling this queen. Since it is my second year colonyless I am hoping it all works out. I know most people just keep them in a room that has no air conditioning but I don't have a room like that. If there is a costly setup with heat lamps and stuff that other people have tested, I'm willing to pay for it. I just really want a surviving colony.
Obviously I'm not giving up on the search for other queens because I know tragedy can strike and nothing can be done. Some queens just don't make it. But I really want to make sure my setup is not the reason if anything goes wrong.
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Re: Help Keeping Queen Alive
If you haven't started a colony yet, never settle for just one queen, as there is probably only a 50 - 70% chance that they will spawn a colony. At least, that's what I've found with my 40 - 70 queens caught. I currently have about 14 - 17 small colonies, and 18 - 25 queens with eggs/larvae/pupae. I really hope that this queen gives you a colony, as it took me a long time to get going, as well.
"Ant Love Forever" - Mikey Bustos
Re: Help Keeping Queen Alive
if you find queens keep them even if you want one colony. i did that with 4 queen all made colony's and i released the others. just for extra insurance plus the queen you found last year was probably infertile and there is nothing you can do about that. Great setup though any fertile queen would love it.
Some of My Informative Sheets
https://forum.AntsCanada.com/viewtopic.php?f=37&t=19099
Includes :
https://forum.AntsCanada.com/viewtopic.php?f=37&t=19099
Includes :
- Ant Care Sheets
Queen Hunting
How To Identify Ants
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- Posts: 39
- Joined: Thu Mar 09, 2017 5:10 pm
Re: Help Keeping Queen Alive
Awesome. I went ahead and ordered a reptile heating pad (because I'm just using a back pain pad right now xD) with a temperature controller though. Mainly for 2 reasons.antnest8 wrote: ↑Tue May 08, 2018 3:12 pmif you find queens keep them even if you want one colony. i did that with 4 queen all made colony's and i released the others. just for extra insurance plus the queen you found last year was probably infertile and there is nothing you can do about that. Great setup though any fertile queen would love it.
1. It was relatively cheap anyway, only about $40
2. My mind is making me have a perfect set-up so if they don't survive I at least know I did all I could
Of course since it was fairly cheap I'm going to have to test it for a couple days before putting my queens lives in its hands.
Re: Help Keeping Queen Alive
Be careful with that back pain heating pad, if you cover it completely with something it could catch on fire. We had one partially under a critter keeper and it overheated to the point that the container melted.
Re: Help Keeping Queen Alive
I currently have a queen of the same species that I caught in my bathroom. I assume she came from the wild colony that lives in the mulch around the house. I think your set up should be great for the starter colony from everything I've researched, seen on the AntsCanada channel, and heard other enthusiasts explain of their own experiences and set ups. Good luck with your new queen!
Re: Help Keeping Queen Alive
watch out for heating pads. i had my ants on one and they all died. The safest way to use a heating pad it to put your ants in a setup where only part (i mean small) of the setup gets heat.
Some of My Informative Sheets
https://forum.AntsCanada.com/viewtopic.php?f=37&t=19099
Includes :
https://forum.AntsCanada.com/viewtopic.php?f=37&t=19099
Includes :
- Ant Care Sheets
Queen Hunting
How To Identify Ants
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